Antarctic Ice Shelf Breaking up, in a Troubling
Sign of Global WarmingAntarctic Ice Shelf 'Hanging by Thread'
PARIS, July 10, 2008
Al-Alam News
New evidence has emerged that a large plate of floating ice shelf
attached to Antarctica is breaking up, in a troubling sign of global
warming, the European Space Agency (ESA) said on Thursday.
Images taken by its Envisat remote-sensing satellite show that Wilkins
Ice Shelf is "hanging by its last thread" to Charcot Island, one of the
plate's key anchors to the Antarctic peninsula, ESA said in a press
release.
"Since the connection to the island... helps stabilize the ice shelf, it
is likely the breakup of the bridge will put the remainder of the ice
shelf at risk," it said.
Wilkins Ice Shelf had been stable for most of the last century, covering
around 16,000 square kilometres (6,000 square miles), or about the size
of Northern Ireland, before it began to retreat in the 1990s.
Since then several large areas have broken away, and two big breakoffs
this year left only a narrow ice bridge about 2.7 kilometers (1.7 miles)
wide to connect the shelf to Charcot and nearby Latady Island.
The latest images, taken by Envisat's radar, say fractures have now
opened up in this bridge and adjacent areas of the plate are
disintegrating, creating large icebergs.
Scientists are puzzled and concerned by the event, ESA added.
The Antarctic peninsula -- the tongue of land that juts northward from
the white continent towards South America -- has had one of the highest
rates of warming anywhere in the world in recent decades.
But this latest stage of the breakup occurred during the Southern
Hemisphere's winter, when atmospheric temperatures are at their lowest.
One idea is that warmer water from the Southern Ocean is reaching the
underside of the ice shelf and thinning it rapidly from underneath.
"Wilkins Ice Shelf is the most recent in a long, and growing, list of
ice shelves on the Antarctic Peninsula that are responding to the rapid
warming that has occurred in this area over the last fifty years,"
researcher David Vaughan of the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) said.
"Current events are showing that we were being too conservative, when we
made the prediction in the early 1990s that Wilkins Ice Shelf would be
lost within 30 years. The truth is, it is going more quickly than we
guessed."
In the past three decades, six Antarctic ice shelves have collapsed
completely -- Prince Gustav Channel, Larsen Inlet, Larsen A, Larsen B,
Wordie, Muller and the Jones Ice Shelf.
Ice blocks are seen floating in the Weddell Sea near the Argentine Base
Marambio in the Antarctic Peninsula.
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